materials requirements planning (mrp)

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27/6/2014 Materials requirements planning (MRP) https://files.nyu.edu/jeb21/public/jeb/or/mrp.html 1/15 OR-Notes J E Beasley OR-Notes are a series of introductory notes on topics that fall under the broad heading of the field of operations research (OR). They were originally used by me in an introductory OR course I give at Imperial College. They are now available for use by any students and teachers interested in OR subject to the following conditions . A full list of the topics available in OR-Notes can be found here . Materials requirements planning (MRP) Introduction Materials requirements planning, referred to by the initials MRP, is a technique which assists a company in the detailed planning of its production. Recall here that the master production schedule sets out an aggregate plan for production. MRP translates that aggregate plan into an extremely detailed plan We shall introduce MRP by means of an example. Example The production manager at Aldershot Manufacturing wishes to develop a materials requirements plan for producing chairs over an 8 week period. She estimates that the lead time between releasing an order to the shop floor and producing a finished chair is 2 weeks. The company currently has 260 chairs in stock and no safety stock (safety stock is stock held in reserve to meet customer demand if necessary). The forecast customer demand is for 150 chairs in week 1, 70 in week 3, 175 in week 5, 90 in week 7 and 60 in week 8. It helps to understand what is going on if we write out, over time, the demand for chairs as below. Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60 On-hand at end of week 110 Order ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? Here we have shown the demand in each of the eight weeks, initially we have 260 chairs available so if these are used to meet the demand of 150 in week 1 we have 260-150 = 110 left on-hand (i.e. in stock) at the end of the week. Plainly we will need to order some more chairs in order to meet all of the forecast future demand over the 8 week planning period. Conceptually therefore we face two related decisions about ordering: timing - when to order quantity - how much to order You can think of asking yourself the question, in each and every period, should I order in this period and

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  • 27/6/2014 Materials requirements planning (MRP)

    https://files.nyu.edu/jeb21/public/jeb/or/mrp.html 1/15

    OR-Notes

    J E Beasley

    OR-Notes are a series of introductory notes on topics that fall under the broad heading of the field of

    operations research (OR). They were originally used by me in an introductory OR course I give at Imperial

    College. They are now available for use by any students and teachers interested in OR subject to the

    following conditions.

    A full list of the topics available in OR-Notes can be found here.

    Materials requirements planning (MRP)

    Introduction

    Materials requirements planning, referred to by the initials MRP, is a technique which assists a company in the

    detailed planning of its production. Recall here that the master production schedule sets out an aggregate plan

    for production. MRP translates that aggregate plan into an extremely detailed plan

    We shall introduce MRP by means of an example.

    Example

    The production manager at Aldershot Manufacturing wishes to develop a materials requirements plan for

    producing chairs over an 8 week period. She estimates that the lead time between releasing an order to theshop floor and producing a finished chair is 2 weeks. The company currently has 260 chairs in stock and nosafety stock (safety stock is stock held in reserve to meet customer demand if necessary). The forecast

    customer demand is for 150 chairs in week 1, 70 in week 3, 175 in week 5, 90 in week 7 and 60 in week 8.

    It helps to understand what is going on if we write out, over time, the demand for chairs as below.

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110Order ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

    Here we have shown the demand in each of the eight weeks, initially we have 260 chairs available so if these

    are used to meet the demand of 150 in week 1 we have 260-150 = 110 left on-hand (i.e. in stock) at the end

    of the week. Plainly we will need to order some more chairs in order to meet all of the forecast future demand

    over the 8 week planning period.

    Conceptually therefore we face two related decisions about ordering:

    timing - when to order

    quantity - how much to order

    You can think of asking yourself the question, in each and every period, should I order in this period and

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    if so how much?

    For the moment suppose we order nothing in week 1, nothing in week 2, etc. The situation by the time we

    reach the end of week 5 will be as below:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 -135Order ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

    If we are to avoid a stockout in week 5 we plainly need to order at least 135 chairs. Now we know that the

    lead time between ordering a chair and receiving it is 2 weeks. Therefore to avoid a stockout in week 5 we

    must have ordered 135 chairs either in week 3, or in any week before week 3. In other words ordering

    135 chairs in week 1, or

    135 chairs in week 2, or

    135 chairs in week 3,

    would each ensure that we have sufficient chairs available to meet forecast demand in week 5.

    If we order these chairs earlier than week 3 we will be carrying extra inventory (stock) for a number ofperiods and, as we know, carrying stock costs money. It would seem appropriate therefore to order 135

    chairs in week 3. This will give:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 0Order 0 0 135 ? ? ? ? ?

    Continuing on in the same manner we get:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 0 0 -90Order 0 0 135 ? ? ? ? ?

    requiring an order of 90 chairs in week 5 and giving:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 0 0 0Order 0 0 135 0 90 ? ? ?

    Continuing again we get:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 0 0 0 -60Order 0 0 135 0 90 ? ? ?

    requiring an order of 60 chairs in week 6 and giving:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 0 0 0 0Order 0 0 135 0 90 60 ? ?

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    Note that we have no data given here on which to base order decisions in weeks 7 and 8. As we are at theend of the planning period these are usually taken as zero.

    Decisions

    Let us be clear about what we have done here with respect to our two decisions of:

    timing - when to orderquantity - how much to order

    With respect to the timing decision we always ordered as late as possible, but never planned a stockout.

    This is a driving principle in MRP, never order before you need to, never plan to stockout.

    With respect to the quantity decision we always ordered as little as possible, i.e. just enough to avoid astockout. This is known as the lot for lot rule, sometimes called LFL or L4L or LL rule. This quantity decision

    rule can be varied in MRP and some other rules are:

    fixed order quantity rule (sometimes called FOQ or FO) - the quantity ordered is an integer multiple ofthe same fixed amount each time an order is made

    fixed period requirements rule (sometimes called FPR) - the quantity ordered should be enough for afixed number of periods

    To illustrate the FPR rule suppose that we decide to order enough for 3 weeks when we make an order. The

    situation at the end of week 5 is (from above) repeated below:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 -135Order ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

    To decide the FPR order quantity we continue this table until week 7. The quantity ordered must then be just

    sufficient to cover weeks 5 to 7 (i.e. to cover 3 weeks as required for a 3 week FPR). This is done below:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 -135 -135 -225Order ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?

    Hence the 3 week FPR order is 225 units in week 3, giving the situation below:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 90 90 0 -60Order 0 0 225 ? ? ? ? ?

    Plainly we need some order in week 6 to cover the stockout in week 8. As we are at the end of the planning

    period we usually order just sufficient (i.e. revert to the LFL rule) and order 60 in week 6 to give:

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 90 90 0 0Order 0 0 225 0 0 60 ? ?

    Note here that with the FPR rule applied to cover p periods you make (at most) one order every p periods

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    (ignoring any order necessary at the end of the planning period).

    Choice of lot size rule

    How then are we to choose between different lot size rules (LFL, FPR and FOQ). We could, of course,

    redo our calculations with different lot size rules (e.g. a FOQ ordering multiples of 100 each time). We would

    see their different effects but would still have to choose between them.

    All of the rules ensure forecast demand is meet, i.e. no stockouts, so this is not a distinguishing feature. The

    LFL rule (by ordering as little as possible each time) will keep average inventory levels low, but will result in

    more orders on average. Both the FPR and FOQ rules will have higher inventory levels, but will result in lessorders on average. Choosing a lot size rule therefore comes down to balancing the number of orders against

    the cost of holding inventory, just as we considered in deriving the EOQ formula in the inventory notes.

    Hence, given cost information, it is possible to derive the most effective (least costly) lot rule to use for any

    particular item.

    Extending the example

    Whilst for the example considered above, just a single item, we easily worked out the orders manually it is

    obvious that as the number of items increases, a manual calculation becomes too complicated and we need a

    computer package. We illustrate this below.

    For the chair production problem considered before suppose now that the production manager as well as

    planning the production of the chair must also plan the production of the components that make up the chair.

    These are: the seat, a back and four legs. The lead time for seats and backs is 2 weeks and the lead time for

    legs is one week. The company currently has an inventory of 60 seats, 40 backs and 80 legs. Scheduledreceipts are 50 seats in week 1 and 10 backs in week 1. The lot size rules the production manager has

    decided to adopt is LFL for for all items.

    Now in planning the production of chairs we need also to plan the production of seats, backs and legs. For

    example we show below the situation as derived above where in week 3 we issued an order for 135 chairs.

    Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8Demand 150 0 70 0 175 0 90 60On-hand at end of week 110 110 40 40 0Order 0 0 135 ? ? ? ? ?

    Now to have 135 chairs made we need to have to hand (i.e. currently available) 135 seats, 135 backs and4(135) = 540 legs. The current inventory of these items (plus scheduled receipts) is insufficient, so orders

    must be placed for these items. Just as we did for the chair itself above these orders must be phased in time

    so as to ensure that we never stockout.

    Now to do all this manually for chairs, seats, backs and legs would just be too time-consuming and error-

    prone. It would be far better to do this via as a computr package, such as the package used in this course.

    In order to solve this example using the package we need to have a better overview of MRP.

    MRP overview

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    In MRP two types of information are required:

    structural; and

    tactical.

    Structural information is information about the items (parts/components) that the company uses and how

    different items are related to one another. It includes information for each item such as lead time and lot (or

    batch) size rule. The key point about this information is that it changes relatively infrequently.

    Tactical information is information about the current state of the company - for example sales orders (real and

    forecast) pending, the master production schedule, on-hand inventory levels and purchase orders. Obviously

    the key point about this information is that it changes frequently.

    Structural information

    The structural information required in MRP relates to:

    item information; andbill of materials.

    We deal with each of these in turn below.

    Item information

    We have structural information relating to each of the items that we are producing. Below we give this

    structural information for each of the items in our simple example.

    Item Lead Lot Unit ABC time size Measure code (weeks) rulechair 2 LFL Each A seat 2 LFL Each B back 2 LFL Each B legs 1 LFL Each C

    Note that:

    the lead time is the time between placing an order and receiving that order - note that this lead time

    assumes that all the items needed for production are available at the time at which we place an order.

    For example for the chair we, as mentioned previously, need one seat, one back and four legs to makeit - the lead time of 2 weeks for a chair assumes that all of these items are available when we place an

    order for a chair - the 2 weeks covers the time required to assemble them into a chair

    as mentioned above the lot size rule relates to deciding how large the lot (batch/order) should be each

    time an order is placed.in fact the package contains a total of ten different lot size rules.

    Unit Measure is the units of measurement for each item - here it is Each specifying that each item is

    identified individually.

    the ABC code relates to inventory analysis. Essentially items are divided into three inventory categories(A, B and C) where:

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    category A items are the most important inventory items and in total are responsible for 80% of

    inventory cost

    category B items are only moderately important inventory items and in total are responsible for15% of inventory cost

    category C items are relatively unimportant inventory items and in total are responsible for 5%

    of inventory cost

    Obviously the idea here is that management attention should be primarily focused upon category A

    items. In the package the ABC code is used purely to produce different management reports.

    In turns of entering our example problem into the package the screen below is the initial screen we need to set

    up number of items, time units etc.

    The package input for our items is as below

    Bill of materials

    In order to show the make-up (in terms of the parts needed for production) we have a Bill of Materials

    (BOM) for the end-product (namely the chair). Below we show the BOM for the chair.

    chair | +-------------------------------+ | | | seat(1) back(1) legs(4)

    This BOM means that to produce one chair we need:

    one seat

    one back

    four legs

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    The Bill of Materials can be thought of as a diagrammatic recipe. Just as in cooking we need a list of

    ingredients and their quantities to know how to cook something, so here the BOM tells us what we need to

    make a chair.

    The BOM is best thought of as being divided into levels, with the final item (the chair) being at the top level

    and the items needed to make up a chair being at the second level.

    Other examples may have more levels, e.g. if items at the second level are themselves made up from furtheritems. Plainly BOM's are structural information that change relatively infrequently. It is also plain that any

    mistakes in specifying BOM's could have disastrous consequences on the shop floor - e.g. consider what

    would happen if we fail to note that a particular part is needed in the production of some item.

    In terms of the package we can enter this BOM as below.

    This BOM can also be shown graphically by the package, as below.

    Tactical information

    The tactical information required in MRP relates to:

    out-going inventory (sales) and planned production (master production schedule); andon-hand inventory and in-coming inventory (purchases).

    We deal with each of these in turn below.

    Diagrammatic overview

    Below we give a diagrammatic overview of the situation.

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    We have specified above structural information about how the items relate to each other (BOM) and item

    information (e.g. lot size rule); and we will shortly (below) specify tactical information about planned

    production and inventory in/out/on-hand.

    Given all this information then (conceptually at least) we should be able to calculate what we should do, in

    terms of when to place orders with external suppliers (or internal suppliers) and the size of those orders, so

    that we never run out of stock of any item i.e. we always achieve the planned production and meet the salesorders.

    This process of calculating the orders needed is called a MRP EXPLOSION and produces the materials

    requirements (hence the name - Materials Requirements Planning).

    An important point to note is that MRP is not cost driven i.e. it does not seek to minimise cost (unlike the

    MPS system used in the package). Instead MRP is stockout driven - that is it will always order sufficient toavoid stockouts (using the lot size rule for each item) and order as late as possible.

    We can now specify the tactical information required.

    Out-going inventory and planned production

    The table below shows the current out-going inventory (predicted or expected sales). For our simple example

    this is just the forecast demand for chairs.

    Time QuantityWeek 1 150Week 3 70Week 5 175Week 7 90Week 8 60

    We need to produce a detailed production plan for seats, backs and legs to meet this demand. To do this we

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    enter this demand data into the package as below.

    Then a detailed production plan can be obtained via an MRP explosion (as will be seen below).

    We can however use the MRP package another way - to examine meeting a predetermined production

    schedule for chairs. Above we have just taken our chair requirements as relating to the total demand. We

    could however, have entered any numbers there - for example a chair production plan as determined from a

    cost based master production schedule (MPS). In that case we simply enter the chair figures from the MPSas the chair requirements and the package will produce a detailed production plan for seats, backs and legs

    to met those requirements.

    For the simple example we consider here we shall just take the chair requirements as equal to the demand

    data.

    Note here that the feasibility in terms of production capacity etc of producing the seats, backs and legs inany period to met our chair requirements is not considered in MRP.

    This is an important point. MRP typically takes no account of capacity considerations. Such

    considerations must be taken into account when the MPS is produced.

    Note here that our package does not include the capability to take capacity into account. Although we can

    enter capacity data into the package this is only used for reporting proposes - to see whether we are

    exceeding production capacities or not. Capacities are not taken into account when the package decideswhat we need to produce and when.

    On-hand and in-coming inventory

    On-hand inventory is the amount of inventory on-hand at the start of the planning period. For our simple

    example this is:

    Item On-hand inventory (units) chair 260seat 60 back 40legs 80

    In-coming inventory is the items we expect to receive as a result of buying-in (purchasing) from external

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    suppliers, or items we expect to receive as a result of internal orders placed earlier. For our simple examplethis is:

    Time Item QuantityWeek 1 seat 50Week 1 back 10

    This data is entered into the package as below.

    Output

    Below we show annotated MRP output from the package (after explosion "Explode Materials

    Requirements") for the example given above for all items.

    Chair

    From the last line "Planned Order Release" we see that we need to order 135 chairs in week 3, 90 in week 5and 60 in week 6. These are as we would expect, since for our simple example we manually calculated when

    we needed to order chairs to met demand. The benefit of MRP is that the process is automated (hence

    quicker and less error-prone), and also that we can easily take other items that go to make up a chair (such

    as seat, back and legs) into account.

    In the output above the columns represent different periods and the rows mean:

    Gross Requirement - the forecast demand for the item

    Scheduled Receipt - any scheduled receipts from previous orders that are currently being processed

    Projected On Hand - what the inventory level will be if we produce according to the plan above and

    the demand forecast is correct

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    Projected Net Requirement - what we will need in each period to avoid a stockout, i.e. the amount

    that is required to avoid stockoutsPlanned Order Receipt - what we will receive each period as a result of planned orders (the orders

    the package has automatically calculated are needed to avoid stockouts)

    Planned Order Release - when we need to release (make) the planned orders having regard to the

    lead time required

    Seat

    From this output we can see that we are advised to place an order for 25 seats in week 1. This advice should

    be followed unless there is a good reason for not doing so! You can see why this order occurs, because wehave a gross requirement for seats of 135 in week 3, why - because the Planned Order Release for the chair

    called for 135 chairs in week 3, and we need the seats to be available when we release the order to make thechairs.

    Other planned order releases for seats are 90 in week 3 and 60 in week 4.

    Back

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    From this output we can see that we are advised to place an order for 85 backs in week 1. This adviceshould be followed unless there is a good reason for not doing so! You can see why this order occurs,

    because we have a gross requirement for backs of 135 in week 3, why - because the Planned Order Releasefor the chair called for 135 chairs in week 3, and we need the backs available to make the chairs. We already

    have 40 backs on-hand, another 10 projected to be received in week 1 so we only need to order 135-10-40=85 new backs to have 135 backs available for the chairs in week 3.

    Legs

    From this output we can see that we are advised to place an order for 460 legs in week 2. This advice should

    be followed unless there is a good reason for not doing so! You can see why this order occurs, because wehave a gross requirement for legs of 540 in week 3, why - because the Planned Order Release for the chair

    called for 135 chairs in week 3, and we need the legs (4 per chair) available to make the chairs. Since wealready have 80 legs on-hand we only need 540-80 = 460 new legs ordered.

    Using the package we can get a summary of all actions (planned order releases) as below.

    Sensitivity

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    It is often important to conduct sensitivity (what-if) analysis in MRP. Considering the example above, forinstance, the only actions we need to take now relate to the orders suggested for the current period. All otheractions relate to orders that we may (or may not) place at future points in time. These can be reviewed once

    the future arrives in the light of new information. Hence the orders suggested for the current period (for seatsand backs in this case) are the ones to concentrate on with respect to sensitivity analysis.

    So, for example, suppose the demand for the chair is more than expected in week 8. Does this impact uponthe actions we must take now or not? If it does then we perhaps need to review the suggested order

    quantities for seats and backs accordingly.

    To illustrate this suppose we change the demand for chairs in week 8 from 60 to 80, i.e. increase it. Changingthe package data and re-exploding we get the action (planned order releases) list as

    compared with the previous action list of

    Here it can be seen that the actions are identical until week 4. At that time we need to begin ordering moreitems to fulfil the projected increase in demand for chairs.

    Extensions

    To extend our example suppose that each leg is made up from two components (X and Y). Two units of X

    and 3 units of Y are needed for one leg and the lead time is 1 week. Then our BOM is:

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    with the item data being:

    Exploding we get that the action list is:

    MRP II

    MRP II is (essentially) MRP but with more added. Typically an MRP II package will include features such ascost information, management reports and easy "what-if" analysis. It may also include capacity requirements

    planning (essentially try and automatically include capacity restrictions in the planning process).

    To confuse things MRP II stands for manufacturing resources planning, signifying that we are

    concentrating upon the planning of the manufacturing resources (e.g. people, machines, storage), rather thanlimiting ourselves to the planning of the materials requirements.

    As an example of the use of MRP II we have the following:

    ICI Agrochemicals

    This company looked at over 40 MRP II packages before choosing Control:Manufacturing from Cincom.The manufacturing operation at their Fernhurst plant is complex with as many as 4,500 finished productsbeing processed from 13,500 different raw materials. Before the days of MRP II stock levels were high and

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    forecasting was hit and miss.

    A 1 million MRP II installation has helped bring about some radical operational improvements since it was

    installed. A good example has been in inventory records and bill of materials accuracy. A BOM administratorwas appointed to monitor data accuracy with a regular audit of a dozen BOM's.

    In addition, staff had to be trained to a very high detailed level, learning how to structure the BOM's tosupport customer service objectives, inventory objectives, order entry objectives and costing objectives.Data integrity increased from around 65% to 98% in just six months as a result.

    MRP packages

    There are many MRP packages available. One example can be seen here.

    JIT

    Just-in-time (JIT) and MRP are two different systems for controlling production. It is often said that:

    MRP = a 'Push' system

    JIT = a 'Pull' system

    Really this is an incorrect analysis - MRP is a system based on fulfilling predicted usage in a set time period.This can be seen in the example considered above. We never stocked out.

    JIT is a system based on actual usage - parts of the production system are "linked" together via the use ofKanban's as the system runs.

    It is this linkage that is the distinguishing difference between MRP and JIT - JIT is a dynamic linked system,MRP is not. This implies that JIT can be used when lead times are short, MRP is more appropriate whenlead times are long.

    In addition MRP is much better suited for computerised implementation then JIT. Consider, for example, thelarge number of finished products (4,500) and raw materials (13,500) mentioned in the ICI example

    considered above. Do you relish the idea of controlling that factory via a JIT system, or would you prefer acomputerised MRP system?